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Marty Peretz and The American Political Consensus on Israel

Opinions about the Israeli-Palestinian dispute are so entrenched
that any single outbreak of violence is automatically evaluated through
a pre-existing lens, shaped by one's typically immovable beliefs about
which side bears most of the blame for the conflict generally or "who
started it." Still, any minimally decent human being -- even those who
view the world through the most blindingly pro-Israeli lens possible,
the ones who justify anything and everything Israel does, and who
discuss these events with a bottomless emphasis on the primitive
(though dangerous) rockets lobbed by Hamas into Southern Israel but
without even mentioning the ongoing four-decades brutal occupation or
the recent, grotesquely inhumane blockade of Gaza -- would find the
slaughter of scores of innocent Palestinians to be a horrible and
deeply lamentable event.

But not The New Republic's Marty Peretz. Here is his uniquely despicable view of the events of the last couple of days:

So
at 11:30 on Saturday morning, according to both the Jerusalem Post and
Ha'aretz, as well as the New York Times, 50 fighter jets and attack
helicopters demolished some 40 to 50 sites in just about three minutes,
maybe five. Message: do not fuck with the Jews.

"Do
not fuck with the Jews." And what of the several hundred Palestinian
dead -- including numerous children -- and many hundreds more seriously
wounded?

Israeli intelligence reported 225
people dead, mostly Hamas military leaders with some functionaries,
besides, and perhaps 400 wounded. The Palestinians announced 300 dead,
probably as a reflex in order to begin their whining about disproportionate Israeli acts of war. And 600 wounded.

Objections to the Israeli attack are just "whining." Those are the words of a psychopath. And what to do now?

Frankly,
I am up to my gullet with this reflex criticism of Israel as going
beyond proportionality in its responses to war waged against its
population with the undisguised intention of putting an end to the
political expression of the Jewish nation. . . .

The current
warfare will go on a bit longer. If there is a pause and if I were
giving advice to the Israelis, this is what I would say to Hamas and to
the people of Gaza: "If a rocket or missile is launched against us, if
you take captive one of our soldiers (as you have held one for two and
a half years), if you raise a new Intifada against us, there will be an
immediate response. And it will be very disproportionate. Proportion does not work."

This
super-tough-guy warrior -- whose prime accomplishment in life was
marrying an heiress and then using her family's money to buy himself The New Republic
-- beats his chest and threatens that even a single Palestinian act in
response to this bombing campaign will provoke still more massive
retaliation in the form of collective punishment (which, not that
anyone cares, happens to be a clear violation of the Geneva Conventions, as are Hamas' far less harmful rocket attacks on Israeli civilians).

It may be true that, as Eric Alterman put it in his seminal article on Marty Pertez (quoting Ezra
Klein), "Peretz is rarely held to account, largely because there's an
odd, tacit understanding that he's a cartoonish character and everyone
knows it." But how unusual are Peretz's views, revolting as they are,
in the American political mainstream? He certainly expresses anti-Arab hatred and bigotry more bluntly than most, but this reflexive support for anything and everything Israel does is anything but unique in our political debates.

QUESTION 8:
Do you think Israel should negotiate with Hamas? Do you agree with
Israel's Gaza Strip embargo? Would you support an Israeli airstrike on
Iran if they felt Tehran's nuclear program represented a threat to
their survival?

ANSWER: "Caroline Kennedy strongly supports a safe and secure Israel. She believe Israel's security decisions should be left to Israel."

What could be more absurd than that? Apparently, not only should we continue to feed Israel billions of dollars a year of American taxpayer money and massive amounts of weapons
-- thereby ensuring that the world, quite accurately, perceives their
actions as American actions -- but we should then take the position
that they are free to do anything they want with it, no matter how
extreme or destructive to our interests, and our only view on all of it
should be that we blindly support whatever they do. Or, as Clinton aide Ann Lewis put it during the primaries, in response to Obama's observation that he needn't have a "Likud view in order to be pro-Israel":

The role of the president of the United States is to support the decisions that are made by the people of Israel. It is not up to us to pick and choose from among the political parties.

Speaker
of the US House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi issued a statement
concerning the Israeli operation in Gaza in which she wrote that "When Israel is attacked, the United States must continue to stand strongly with its friend and democratic ally."

According
to Pelosi, "Peace between Israelis and Palestinians cannot result from
daily barrages of rocket and mortar fire from Hamas-controlled Gaza.
Hamas and its supporters must understand that Gaza cannot and will not
be allowed to be a sanctuary for attacks on Israel."

Not
a word of condemnation of the Israeli blockade -- which has caused
extreme suffering and deprivation in Gaza -- or of the massively
disproportionate response or the ongoing and ever-expanding Israeli
occupation. It is all one-sided support for whatever Israel does from
our political class, and one-sided condemnation of Israel's enemies
(who are, ipso facto, American enemies) -- all of it, as usual, sharply
divergent from the consensus in much of the rest of the world.

It
would be nice if U.S. citizens weren't connected to and responsible for
every Israeli military action, so that we really could and should take
the attitude that what the Israeli Government does -- or what is done
to it -- is not our responsibility. That's how it should be.

Instead,
since we fund a huge bulk of it and supply the weapons used for much of
it and use our veto power at the U.N. to enable all of it, we are
connected to it -- intimately -- and bear responsibility for all of
Israel's various wars, including the current overwhelming assault on
Gaza, as much as Israelis themselves. Blind support for whatever they
do -- the consensus view in American political life in both parties --
is therefore a total abdication of our responsibility.

It
remains to be seen if Barack Obama intends to deviate even a small
amount from what has been decades of excessively loyal U.S. support for
Israel -- which, over the last eight years, transformed into truly
blind and absolute support for anything they do. It's impossible to
know for sure until Obama is inaugurated, but the bipartisan, purely
"pro-Israel" statements issued by his allies -- such as
Caroline Kennedy and Nancy Pelosi -- don't bode well, nor do the
statements which Obama himself made during the campaign, as compiled
yesterday by Salon's Mark Schone:

The
first job of any nation state is to protect its citizens. And so I can
assure you that if -- I don't even care if I was a politician -- if
somebody was sending rockets into my house where my two daughters sleep
at night, I'm going to do everything in my power to stop that. And I
would expect Israelis to do the same thing.

Can't
the exact same mentality be deployed to justify everything Hamas has
done and is doing, to wit: "if a foreign power were brutally occupying
my country for four decades -- or blockading my country and denying my
children medical needs and nutrition and the ability even to exit --
I'm going to do everything in my power to stop that. And I would
expect Palestinians to do the same thing"? But the last thing that our
political class ever extends is reciprocal, two-sided analysis to this
dispute.

UPDATE: Without necessarily endorsing all of it, I want to recommend very highly this column by Israeli Gideon Levy in Haaretz,
entitled "The neighborhood bully strikes again." What's most striking
about it is that this scathing criticism of Israel's behavior can --
and does -- appear in one of Israel's leading newspapers, but not a
paragraph of it could ever be uttered by any American politician, in
either party, of any national prominence.

UPDATE II: Here's
Rep. Howard Berman, Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee,
and a Democrat, echoing Nancy Pelosi, George Bush and virtually every
other key American political official:

Israel
has a right, indeed a duty, to defend itself in response to the
hundreds of rockets and mortars fired from Gaza over the past week. No
government in the world would sit by and allow its citizens to be
subjected to this kind of indiscriminate bombardment. The loss of
innocent life is a terrible tragedy, and the blame for that tragedy
lies with Hamas.

One can travel from the farthest
right fringe of the GOP to the heart of the Democratic Party leadership
and hear exactly the same thing: Israel is always right. Israel must
not be criticized. Israel never bears any blame. Any action taken by
Israel is justified. No matter the situation, that just gets repeated
over and over like some hypnotic bipartisan mantra. Meanwhile,
American citizens overwhelmingly -- 71%
-- want their Government to be "even-handed" in the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict. Yet that view is simply ignored, disregarded, not even
viable for any American mainstream political leader to express.

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Further

On this day 50 years ago, a platoon of U.S. soldiers entered the hamlet of My Lai in South Vietnam and, in hours, massacred 504 unarmed women, children and old men. Over 300 of the victims were younger than 12; the G.I.s also raped many of the women and burned all the homes. Today, with torturers and warmongers on the rise, the horrors of My Lai serve as a grim warning. In America's wars of choice, says one vet, we are all "one step away from My Lai."